Sunday, March 14, 2010

SGX Listed Palm Oil Stocks - FY 2009 Balance Sheet Analysis

The following table is an ratio analysis of balance sheet numbers of the SGX listed Palm Oil stocks. The raw numbers are available in this post. It should be noted that Wilmar has significant downstream businesses as compared with the other stocks which may be primarily upstream. This difference is business does indeed show up in the analysis below.

Wilmar Int

Golden Agri

IndoFood Agri

First Res

Kencana Agri

Current Ratio

1.24

1.53

1.34

3.62

1.35

Quick Ratio

0.86

0.95

0.97

3.35

1.12

Debt Ratio (Total Liabilities / Total Assets)

51.3%

30.0%

45.2%

41.3%

44.8%

Equity Ratio (Equity / Total Assets)

48.7%

70.0%

54.8%

58.7%

55.2%

Short term debt / Equity

73.4%

5.7%

13.5%

1.8%

10.6%

Long term debt / Equity

10.6%

6.7%

40.2%

46.3%

42.3%

Total Debt / Equity

83.9%

12.3%

53.7%

48.1%

53.0%

Current Assets / Total Assets

54.9%

14.0%

16.5%

20.5%

16.0%

Cash / Total Assets

21.9%

3.6%

7.6%

17.8%

2.1%

Biological / Total Assets

4.9%

67.8%

40.1%

53.1%

60.3%

Intangibles / Total Assets

17.2%

1.5%

13.3%

3.7%

0.0%

PPE / Total Assets

16.7%

14.0%

17.9%

18.3%

19.5%

Inventories / Total Assets

16.8%

5.3%

4.6%

1.5%

2.7%

Receivables / Total Assets

13.5%

4.2%

3.2%

0.4%

9.1%

Current Liabilities / Total Liabilities

86.1%

30.6%

27.4%

13.7%

26.4%

In terms of ranking of balance sheet size, the 5 palm oil stocks have been listed from biggest to smallest, from left to right - the biggest being Wilmar International and the smallest being Kencana Agri.

The current ratio is mainly used to give an idea of the company's ability to pay back its short-term liabilities (debt and payables) with its short-term assets (cash, inventory, receivables). The higher the current ratio, the more capable the company is of paying its obligations. As measured by this ratio, the ranking of financial strength from strongest to the weakest is as follows:

First Resources

Golden Agri

Kencana Agri

Indofood Agri

Wilmar International

The quick ratio measures a company's ability to meet its short-term obligations with its most liquid assets. The higher the quick ratio, the better the position of the company. As measured by this ratio, the ranking of financial strength from strongest to the weakest is as follows:

First Resources

Kencana Agri

Indofood Agri

Golden Agri

Wilmar International

The Debt ratio indicates what proportion of debt a company has relative to its assets. The measure gives an idea to the leverage of the company along with the potential risks the company faces in terms of its debt-load. The lower this ratio, the better. As measured by this ratio, the ranking of financial strength from strongest to the weakest is as follows:

It is interesting to note that First Resources consistently scores well throughout while Wilmar International is at the bottom of every ranking. This is despite the fact that Wilmar international is by far the largest in terms of total assets of all the 5 companies analysed here.

Biological assets are defined as living animals or plants. In an agricultural environment, biological assets are produced, sold or transformed into additional biological assets from controlled processes that manage their growth and maturation. Wilmar International has a surprisingly low % of total assets as biological assets at 4.9%. This is far lower than the other four companies, which have biological assets of between 40% and 70%.

Where, then do Wilmar's assets show up? Wilmar's assets appear to show up has abnormally high inventories and receivables as % of total assets. In contrast to its peers, Wilmar appears to have about 3-4 times the amount of inventories and receivables as a proportion of total assets. High levels of inventory and receivables may imply poor working capital efficiency. However, Wilmar's current ratio is the lowest of all the 5 companies. What this suggests is that Wilmar has amazing working capital management, especially since its short term longs and borrowings are very high!

More to come in later posts when we consider the balance sheet in conjunction with the income statement.